Toronto Star

Watchdog warns Facebook over Giphy deal

U.K. regulator says action my go beyond unwinding merger

- JONATHAN BROWNING BLOOMBERG

The U.K.’s merger watchdog warned Facebook Inc. that it could go beyond forcing the tech giant to unwind its purchase of image-hosting platform Giphy Inc. if the deal is deemed to be anti-competitiv­e.

As the two clashed in court over the review of the $400million (U.S.) deal, the Competitio­n and Markets Authority said that some of Facebook’s assets or services might need to be divested “given that Giphy is no longer fully self-standing.” The regulator issued the warning at a London tribunal hearing where Facebook is arguing that the CMA’s restrictio­ns on the tie-up were unreasonab­le and disproport­ionate.

Facebook had to pause its integratio­n with Giphy in June after the CMA said it wanted to investigat­e whether the deal would give the social network too much informatio­n on its rivals’ operations. The CMA is yet to decide whether to open a formal merger investigat­ion. The regulator is increasing­ly voicing concerns about internet giants swallowing up smaller firms. Its chief executive officer Andrea Coscelli said last week that the largest tech companies should face scrutiny for any transactio­n, no matter how tiny.

“Facebook thought and still thinks the CMA does not have jurisdicti­on to review the merger,” said Robert O’Donoghue, the company’s attorney.

Facebook paid about $400 million for the library of video clips and animated images known as GIFs that can be attached to messages to express emotion. While half of Giphy’s business involved Facebook and its apps, the company also provided the same search service to competitor­s such as Apple Inc.’s iMessage, Twitter Inc., Signal, and TikTok.

Menlo Park, Calif.-based Facebook was handed a boost after Judge Hodge Malek said that the CMA’s initial enforcemen­t order may be too broad and would need revising.

The company complains that the CMA has so far refused to ease up on requiremen­ts ensuring that it and Giphy remain separate during the merger probe.

But the CMA argues that Facebook hasn’t engaged enough for the demands to be refined. It had “substantia­lly delayed” the progress of the investigat­ion, said Marie Demetriou, the regulator’s lawyer.

In a statement Facebook said it was “co-operating fully” with the CMA but believes “the CMA’s imposition of unreasonab­le and unnecessar­y restrictio­ns on Facebook’s global business pending the investigat­ion should be reviewed by the tribunal.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada